SYNTH ZONE
Visit The Bar For Casual Discussion
Page 2 of 2 < 1 2
Topic Options
#160704 - 06/04/03 10:06 AM Re: the folly of the dx7
squeak_D Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
I personally liked the DX-7.. It had a nice warm sound to it..

Squeak
_________________________
GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.

Top
#160705 - 06/04/03 10:15 AM Re: the folly of the dx7
squeak_D Offline
Senior Member

Registered: 10/08/00
Posts: 4715
Loc: West Virginia
Actually now that I think about it a good friend of mine who is one hell of a jazz player uses a DX-7 for a lot of his work. He creates his own sounds as well and uses the presets.. That DX sounds great with his style of jazz.. It's kind of fusion meets hip hop with a personal twist..

Squeak
_________________________
GEAR: Yamaha MOXF-6, Casio MZX-500, Roland Juno-Di, M-Audio Venom, Roland RS-70, Yamaha PSR S700, M-Audio Axiom Pro-61 (Midi Controller). SOFTWARE: Mixcraft-7, PowerTracks Pro Audio 2013, Beat Thang Virtual, Dimension Le.

Top
#160706 - 06/04/03 12:45 PM Re: the folly of the dx7
YamahaUS1 Offline
Member

Registered: 10/24/02
Posts: 238
Loc: Buena Park, CA, USA
Quote:
Originally posted by The Pro:
Also the DX-7 is a very weighty instrument compared to newer keyboards and you'll likely never be able to get it repaired should it break.


Actually, it depends on what breaks. The Main board is no longer in stock, but many of the parts on it are. We still fix them. The action type is the same at that used in the Motif and 9000PRO.
Keys: In stock
Contacts: In stock
Volume Slider: In stock


------------------
Steve Deming
Assistant Manager
Customer Support Dept.
Pro Audio & Combo Division
Yamaha Corporation of America
_________________________
Yamaha Customer Support
www.yamaha.com/pacsupport
714.522.9000

Top
#160707 - 06/04/03 01:44 PM Re: the folly of the dx7
danb Offline
Member

Registered: 12/28/98
Posts: 306
The DX7 is one-of-a-kind synth. I've own one in 1997. Mine was a newer edition but without the floppy drive. The DX7 is old but it can still be use today. It is the music that you make out of it and not the technology. There are some version of it today like DX200 (a desktop groove machine), an expansion card, and a software version called FM7 from the maker of B4), but I haven't tried them yet. Since I sold my DX7 I missed its unique sounds specially its E. Piano, MalletBrass, Softhorn.

Anybody used those version of DX7 I mentioned above? Let me know what's your opinion.

Thanks,

Dan

Top
#160708 - 06/04/03 02:59 PM Re: the folly of the dx7
KN_Fan Offline
Member

Registered: 10/01/02
Posts: 492
I think a lot of the "Whitney Houston style" electric piano sounds nowadays are modeled on the infamous "DX7 electric piano".

If you MIDI (layered) the DX7's bass with other synth, it adds more low and oomph to the sound.

I basically hadn't finished elementary school when the DX came out

Top
#160709 - 06/07/03 09:52 AM Re: the folly of the dx7
Idatrod Offline
Member

Registered: 07/23/02
Posts: 562
Loc: Oceanside, CA USA
Hey Zack here is more info on the DX7. This is actually the DX7 II FD but it's still a DX7. Also congratulations on raising two fine daughters who are now out on their own facing the challenges life has to offer in this big wide World of ours. But I'm pretty sure the solitude without them will actually be quite theraputic for both you and the Mrs. That is until the Grandkids show up on the scene then You & the Mrs. will want them over every other weekend at least.

Here is the Info:
Yamaha DX-7 II FD
Summary
Manufacturer URL www.yamaha.com
Ease of Use 7.1 (11 responses)
Features 8.2 (11 responses)
Expressiveness/Sounds 9.3 (11 responses)
Reliability 9.3 (11 responses)
Customer Support 8.7 (11 responses)
Overall Rating 9.4 (11 responses)
Additional Info Search Web
Submit a review for this product!

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Price Paid: US $2250.00
Ease of Use: 9
Has been easy to use (also had one with E! that I sold, what a learning curve for that one!!), learned fm synthesis on a DX21 and TX81z, so the IIFD was a natural progression for me. I rarely use any factory patches, the originals were not that good, but aftermarket programmers and Yamaha techs proved that it could out D50 a Roland D50. Most of the patches I use are either highly edited versions of the original factory patches or originals.

Features: 9
No expansions available except the E! card, no sequencer, no effects, midi implementation was excellent for the time it was made. Their was a ROM chip upgrade (which Yamaha installed for me at no charge) that addressed some glitches. Keyboard action is firm and fast, the aftertouch can make your patches very expressive (as can the breath controller)with a little patch tweaking. LCD is on the small side, but once you get used to the many little red function LEDs, it is OK. I often see complaints from people about polyphony, but really, how many fingers do you have and how many notes are you apt to play at one time on this type of synth?

Expressiveness/Sounds: 9
The sounds can be very good or very bad, depends on the patches you are using. As I mentioned, with proper editing you can make the patches VERY expressive. I use the breath controller and aftertouch at the same time to control different parameters at the same time on some patches. Velocity control is excellent and also contributes to the expressiveness. I play many types of music, from country to rock to classical.

Reliability: 10
This keyboard is built like a tank, totally reliable, the only real service I have had done was the updated ROM chip at 6 months old, a new output board (under warranty), and a new battery at six years old.

Customer Support: 10
Customer support, I can't say enough good things about Yamaha's customer support (Roland should be so lucky). When I had the output boards replaced under warranty, my dealer called Yamaha, the tech there agreed with the diagnosis, pulled parts into the conversation (three way call)and the part was sent out next day air. That was 2:30 on a Wed. afternoon, the keyboard was back in my hands repaired at 10:30 Friday morning. As a comparison, I bought a Roland D10 shortly after that and discovered an inherent chip defect (same chip in D10, D110, and D20), had to keep calling them at my expense, they finally admitted that it was a chip defect, told it would not be fixed (does not respond properly to midi volume change), I bought it and it was mine. Fortunately, my dealer gave me a refund on the D10, I sold all of my Roland equipment and will NEVER buy from Roland again. All of my Yamaha equipment has been rock steady and rarely ever needs anything done, my hats off to Yamaha customer service in the US. Guess who gets my business?

Overall Rating: 9
I like this keyboard, it was my primary keyboard until I bought my SY77 (1991?). I've been playing for 30+ years, played in bands for a number of years, just do the home studio gig now. I also use an Alesis drum machine, two Yamaha MEP4s, Yamaha MJC8, Alesis midiverb, Yamaha 12 ch. mixer, Yamaha power amp, a pair of large Yamaha speakers, a pair of large EV speakers, Hammond C3 with a 910 Leslie and a Steinway model L grand. And I would still buy another DX7 IIFD if anything ever happened to this one.

Submitted by Clyde Atkinson at 06/06/2003 20:59


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Best regards,
Mike

Top
#160710 - 06/07/03 11:29 AM Re: the folly of the dx7
eddiefromrotherham Offline
Member

Registered: 03/21/02
Posts: 788
Loc: Rotherham,England.
I still have the TX81Z FM Tone Generator and the QX21 Digital Sequence Recorder which I bought in 1987 for a month's wage both!
I don't use them now of course but when the Antiques Road Show comes around here I'll make a fortune!
I had a mountain of fun with them way back but they are now surplus to requirements and carefully stowed away in my music room, together with manuals and cables.
Yeah, we were really Techies then
cheers
Eddie

------------------
Eddie from Rotherham
www.yamahakeyboards.info

my mail is virus-free thanks to Norton Antivirus2002


[This message has been edited by eddiefromrotherham (edited 06-07-2003).]
_________________________
Eddie from Rotherham
http://www.music2myears.plus.com

Top
#160711 - 06/07/03 06:36 PM Re: the folly of the dx7
svpworld Offline
Member

Registered: 08/16/00
Posts: 442
Loc: UK
Without doubt, probably the most complicated synthesiser ever to program! The presets were fantastic at the time, creating anything else yourself was virtually out of the question unless you were a computer programmer and mathematician with an understanding of FM modulation theory in a time variant way! Needless to say most who played it used the presets, hence why its so easily distinguishable. By modern standards the original DX is noisy, it has a hard touch sensitivity which does need some banging and those membrane switches on the control panel wear out with time. It also weighs a ton, has limited midi support and is only 16 note polyphonic and is not multitimbral. There's no built in effects, or filters as such, so you get a very digital cold and clanny sound in my opinion, but its unique. There are later models including the DX7 II which offer improved multitimbral and effects, also the TX rack etc. Of course there were also many 4 operator variants, such as the DX100, DX9, DX21, DX27 and then the cheesiest naffest sounding 2 operator early FM PC soundcards and early yamaha arranger keyboards. I owned a CX5M at the time which was essentially an 8 note multitimbral polyphonic DX9 built into an MSX computer. THe advantage was it came with a voice editing cartridge which made sound editing possible, though attempting to recreate acoustic instruments was beyond me! Best sounds famous for are basses, electric pianos, bell and clanging sounds and anything bright, sharp and metallic! A nice retro piece of kit but now adays you can also get a VST plug in that emulates the DX7 on your PC - and includes the original DX sounds!

Regards
Simon Williams

__________________________________________________________
SVPworld.com - Creative Multimedia & Music
incorporating PSRworld and Tyrosworld

forum.svpworld.com - No adverts, No spam, No nonsense!
share your music, get help and advice, make new friends!

Top
#160712 - 06/09/03 01:37 AM Re: the folly of the dx7
Nigel Offline
Admin

Registered: 06/01/98
Posts: 6482
Loc: Ventura CA USA
I still have a Yamaha SY77 with AFM and onboard FX as well as a TX802 rackmount module so FM is still a firm favorite of mine. The AFM on the SY77 adds even more capability to FM as on the DX7 and is capable of some great sounds.

I still don't find that many other synths have the range of dynamic velocity response that Yamaha's FM synths provide. They set a standard years ago that is hard to beat today. It is great to see Yamaha continue providing FM synthesis in their recent products.

Top
Page 2 of 2 < 1 2

Moderator:  Admin, Diki, Kerry 



Help keep Synth Zone Online